What My Girls Are Getting for Easter

In a time when most dolls in the toy store are slutty or skanky (when did Barbie get to be a solid feminist choice?), I loved reading this article.  I have a new crush on the inventor.

From the Seattle Times Business Section today:

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GoldieBlox hopes young girls find playing engineer ‘just right’

Meet Goldie, a female-engineer character who invents, designs and builds to inspire young girls to be scientists or engineers.

By Heather Somerville

San Jose Mercury News

Debbie Sterling, founder of GoldieBlox,  poses with stacks of her new toy that teaches girls basic engineering principles. The Stanford University engineering graduate   wants  to nurture  girls’ interest in STEM careers.

Enlarge this photo

Laura A. Oda / Contra Costa Times

Debbie Sterling, founder of GoldieBlox, poses with stacks of her new toy that teaches girls basic engineering principles. The Stanford University engineering graduate wants to nurture girls’ interest in STEM careers.

Move over, Barbie; there’s a new girl in town.

She goes by GoldieBlox, and unlike her namesake, Goldilocks, she doesn’t get into mishaps with three bears. This Goldie is a female engineer character who invents, designs and builds to inspire a future generation of women engineers.

GoldieBlox is the brainchild of Stanford University graduate and engineer-turned-entrepreneur Debbie Sterling. She created GoldieBlox — which includes a construction toy set and storybook starring the tool-wielding Goldie — to teach girls basic engineering skills and open more pathways for women to pursue jobs in the male-dominated industry.

“I’m trying to give girls something more than just dolls and princesses,” she said.

Sterling, 30, hopes that the soon-to-be-released GoldieBlox will teach more girls to love tech-heavy disciplines and open their minds to engineering. And if it can shake up the old-school toy industry, which for years has offered girls little more than busty dolls and pink Legos, all the better, she said.

But this isn’t just a plug for girl power. Oakland, Calif.-based GoldieBlox has caught the attention of researchers and educators across the country who say the toy could help engage more girls in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, or STEM, an education priority for the Obama administration.

The GoldieBlox book, written and illustrated by Sterling, follows Goldie as she invents machines and solves problems with a cast of animal friends that includes a Spanish-speaking dog, Nacho, and a tutu-wearing pink dolphin.

The pegboard and tool kit allow kids to build whatever Goldie is building in the book, and to learn engineering concepts, like how a wheel and axle work and the basics of tension, force and friction.

“I can’t wait to have her sitting there on store shelves in her overalls and her tool belt, because I think that that sends a strong message,” Sterling said.

The message is this: Engineering isn’t just for boys.

Toys are a crucial entry point for kids to get exposure to STEM disciplines, and girls miss out on some of the early playtime experiences necessary to develop those skills, said Yvonne Ng, who heads St. Catherine University’s National Center for STEM Elementary Education.

“We’re not engaging girls. We’re still thinking in very male terms,” Ng said.

Sterling, who earned her engineering degree in 2005, developed GoldieBlox with help from Kickstarter, an online crowd-funding platform for creative projects. She raised $286,000 — almost twice her goal — in about a month.

After her fundraising video went viral on social media, she received about 22,000 online pre-orders for the toy, which brought in money to start production.

According to studies by the American Association of University Women, about 87 percent of professional engineers are men.

Sterling hopes GoldieBlox will change that statistic. The toy, which sells for $30, lands on store shelves next month, but the first 18,000 pre-ordered copies are set to be delivered this week.

Already, Sterling has plans to make GoldieBlox into a series and says she’s set to launch an interactive digital version for the Apple iPad late this year.

The successes, or failures, of GoldieBlox will be carefully tracked by a Pennsylvania State University professor and graduate student. Lynn Liben, a distinguished professor of psychology who is leading the research, said GoldieBlox is one of the few toys that breaks the gender stereotypes reinforced by the toy industry.

“Many toy companies are still marketing to boys versus girls,” Liben said. “It tells people that boys and girls are different when it comes to playing or building or getting dirty. That can be problematic because not every kid fits that gender tendency that might be typical.”

Another Excuse to Engineer

Of course I reuse Ziplock bags.  Not only is it an unnecessary expense to buy new ones all the time, it is a crime to throw away that much plastic.  I actually try to use tupperware first, but sometimes there’s not substitute.  Which is why I wash my ziplocks then search around for a place to put them while they take days to dry.
I’ve fixed this problem at home by putting up a thin, bendable steel rod under a shelf.  Everything in my kitchen is a bit of a temporary solution until we put in new cabinets/island in a few years.  I always have something hanging, so it’s not always attractive—but so, so handy!
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I one-upped myself this weekend at the cabin. It’s mostly hidden when not in use (look for the black brackets in the corner h0lding up a sideways “L”-shaped metal rod. 
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When I need to hang up bags, I can pull the rod out over the sink and let them drip-dry while we’re gone. 
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I thunk it up myself.

Double Bluff Beach: Family Fun Day!

We’ve heard about Double Bluff on Whidbey Island before we ever put an offer on the cabin, but didn’t visit until today, a gorgeous, non-windy day that may have reached 60 degrees in the heat of the afternoon. I had packed the hats, gloves, and multiple layers that immediately got ditched or drenched, depending upon the child. 
Kyla ditched.
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Piper drenched.
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I love this reflection shot.
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She tripped, and is only halfway down in this shot.
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I had to dig in the car to find an old 2T pull-up to  keep her bits somewhat protected under my sweatshirt.
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Once Wesley started waking up, he headed straight to the water. We stripped him while he was still dry.
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Hey Wes, there’s good reason to wear your pants (and underwear) the right way.  Silly boy.
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Give Dwayne’s kids some water, sand, and sticks, and they can play until the sun goes behind the bluff and the temperature drops 20 degrees.  Oh, note to self: take out the dead baby crab that Piper put in my jacket pocket.
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We weren’t the only ones having fun.  These guys played for hours on their boogie boards.  I can’t believe my camera caught this shot.
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I so want to do this someday.
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We have a lot more to explore at this park.
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We had to drag this boy out of the water, shivering and chattering. 
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All three in one shot!  I’m a happy mom.
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Bread Recipe

breads 1I have made my own sandwich bread now for not quite a year.  Why is it that making bread is so soul-satisfying?

Whole Wheat Bread recipe:

1/3 cup oil (canola, etc. Coconut oil is a healthy and tasty choice, but a big pain to use, I find)

1/3 cup honey

1 tablespoon yeast

2 cups warm water (105 F, +/- a few degrees)

Mix in KitchenAid with bread hook, and let sit 5-10 minutes, until bubbly.  Then add:

2 tsp salt

7 cups flour  (My perfect mix, after much experimenting, is

        4 cups whole wheat flour

        2 cups white flour

        1/3 cup gluten flour (vital gluten, bulk foods at Fred Meyer or

                        Bob’s Mill)

        1/3 cup oat bran, wheat bran, or some healthy roughage stuff

        1/3 cup flax seed, cold milled or your preference)

Mix in a little at a time.  Let mixing become kneading on the KitchenAid for 5-10 minutes, until it is the right elasticity.  This can be done by hand, but this is not soul-satisfying to me.  I prefer to clean up the kitchen while the machine does the hard work.

Cover bowl with large plate (to save plastic wrap) and let rise 1/2 – 3 hours, whatever is convenient to your schedule.

Divide dough in half.  “Squish” down into a rectangle, then roll up into a loaf size shape, doing your best to have no air bubbles.  This gives it a better shape than just shaping it freehand.  Put in greased loaf pans and let rise until they are the size you want them to be (1-5 hours, as your busy schedule allows).  Bake 30 minutes at 350. 

Take loaf out of pan right away (or it gets soggy as it cools). 

 

Final step—have your oldest climb up on the counter to put her slice in the toaster and place her knee on a warm, fresh loaf.  Sigh heavily.

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2013 Booklist

8. Speaking Among the Bones (A Flavia de Luce novel) / Alan Bradley.  This is the 5th in a series that I am on the library hold lists long before the book is published.  A day’s read if one ignores one’s duties enough.  I adore Flavia, who is now almost twelve.  The last sentence in the book is the best/worst I’ve read in a mystery.   Unfortunately for my sanity, the sixth book isn’t scheduled to published until “early 2014”.  You’re killing me, Alan Bradley.

7. Radical: Fighting to put students first / Michelle Rhee.  I read a book about Ms. Rhee last autumn and got a lot out of it, including a radical crush on Michelle and her philosophies.  I bought Radical when I went to see her last week at a Town Hall lecture (thank you, Seattle Public Library!). There were pickets and protests and hisses and everything.   Since leaving the Washington, D.C. district, she has started StudentsFirst, a union of sorts for students.  She’s considered controversial, but I support her positions.  I definitely want to teach again when the kids are all in school, but she inspires me to move to the inner city and work harder than I ever have in my life to be the best teacher any kid has ever had.  I’ve already said it: she’s inspiring.

6.  All There Is: Love stories from StoryCorp / Dave Isay (editor).  I put this on my Hold list when I got on my This I Believe essay kick last year, one of NPR’s great features.  Forty minute interviews between lovers, friends, and family are written up in short essays.  It’s a excellent peek into the love lives of  representative slice of America. 

5.  American Dervish / Ayad Akhtar. We picked this novel for book club and I loved it.  I learned more about Islam, Jewish-Muslim-Christian tensions, and the Koran through this piece of fiction than I’ve ever gotten out of a deliberate study.  Ah, the power of story.  It brings up some great discussion topics, not only for book club, but even for Dwayne and I.   Unfortunately, this is the author’s first book so as much as I would like to grab from the shelves all his other brilliance, I will have to wait. 

4. Blueprints for building better girls / Elissa Schappell.  Meh. A collection of short stories that I didn’t realize were about the same women until nearly the end.  If you decide to read this book about anorexic girls with more issues than food, know that Elizabeth, Bender, and B are the same person.  Maybe now you will get more out of this than I did.

3.  The Higher Power of Lucky, by Susan Patron.  Another audio read, I found this is the section of previous Newberry winners.  Lucky, a ten year old orphan, is trying to find her Higher Power, a concept she has heard about while eavesdropping on the different “Anonymous” meetings her in small, small town.  Hey, it won a prestigous award—always worth reading.

2.  Predictably Irrational: the hidden forces that shape our decisions, by Dan Ariely.  This was an audio read for me and both the reader and subject were fascinating.  It’s in the same genre as Freakomics or anything by Malcolm Gladwell.

1.  World without End, by Ken Follett.  Our book group read Follett’s Pillars of the Earth a few years ago and decided to tackle the sequel, giving ourselves December and January.  It’s 1,050 pages about life in a English town and priory in the 14th century.  I love his historical fiction—I can read a history book about Martin Luther’s protests of certain Church practices, but fiction makes the fact more real.  The author uses a few prototype characters no matter what century he’s writing in, but overall, I’d say my enjoyment of the novel was just about worth the 4-5 other books I gave up reading to get through this one. 

[Red denotes a work of nonfiction.] 

5 Down

Last night, the title for this would have been 4 Down, Dwayne to Go. But this morning took care of the last man standing.

Timeline:

Two Saturdays ago:  Piper gets sick (over her siblings); no kids wake up, Piper is fine the next day.

Last Saturday:  We return from the cabin Friday night to go to two birthday parties Saturday morning.  Kyla starts us early by getting sick about 4am.  I’m sick by the morning.  We lay around on the couch all day, sleeping and crawling to the bathroom.  Kyla is fine by dinner time. 

Last Sunday:  Time for Mama to get better because Wesley gets sick.  Starting about 10am, he throws up 1-3 times an hour until bedtime, and then is okay.  Mama just held him all day and did a lot of laundry when I could.

Monday:  Hesitantly optimistic.  I’m not feeling great, but  I’m upright and moving.  Make a quick trip to the cabin to get all the food we left in the refrigerator of Friday when we had planned to be back hours later.   Piper throws up for the first time  just I as am getting ready for bed.

Today:  I drag Piper’s mattress out to the kitchen so she and I could sleep next to a sink and a easy-clean-up floor.  That comes in handy about every hour during the night.  Come morning, she is weak but more energetic and no longer needing the bucket and towels.  Kyla is losing ground so I keep her home from school to rest.  Dwayne becomes unbearable nauseous and actually stays home from work and sleeps until midafternoon. 

Tomorrow:  Please, please let us all be back on our feet—not on our knees—again!